Wednesday, 21 August 2019

The Mysteries surrounding St. Patrick's Well Ballyshannon and remembering a 90th Anniversary




Rag Tree at St. Patrick's Well Ballyshannon

Worth a Visit  during this  Heritage Week or anytime

The scenic St. Patrick’s Well in the Abbey area outside Ballyshannon is well worth a visit during Heritage Week as the present grotto was opened ninty years ago on the 15th of August 1929. The site is in a tranquil location overlooking the picturesque Abbey Bay and historic Sheegus Hill with the Sligo-Leitrim mountains as a backdrop. Use the enclosed information to guide you around the grotto and well. Pick a good day at anytime! Definitely worth a visit for all the family and for visitors. There are a number of mysteries surrounding the well.

The Feast of the Assumption  on the 15th August is a popular date for visiting the well. Back in 1929 there was a religious revival in the Catholic Church as that was the centenary of the achievement of Catholic Emancipation by Daniel O’Connell. On the 15th August 1929 a new grotto to Saint Patrick was erected at the well through the efforts of   the local community and in particular of Mr .James Campbell, who owned the adjacent mill.  He was also instrumental in the construction of a roadway to replace the nettle-grown narrow path leading down to St. Patrick’s Well. Five beds were created by taking boulders from the river Erne and the station beds still survive to the present day. Many families who still live in the area contributed voluntarily with the construction work.  The McLoone family who live near to the mill buildings today are closely related to James Campbell.  Bunting and flags decorated all approaches to the Abbey Well on the 15th August and there was a boat in the bay also adorned with flags. People began assembling in town before 10 o’ clock in the morning and the Ballyshannon Brass and Reed Band led a long procession from the Courthouse via the Mall, Market Street, Tírconaill Street, Bishop Street before arriving at the well at 10.30. “The Donegal Democrat” was on hand to record the ceremony at the well: 
“Motor cars plied constantly between the town and the Abbey, and large numbers were present from more distant parts of Donegal as well as from the adjoining Counties of Sligo, Leitrim and Fermanagh. Rev. A. MacLoone, B.D., St. Eunan’s College, Letterkenny, was celebrant of the Mass; Rev. L. MacGinley, D.D., Philadelphia, being  Deacon; Rev. C. Daly, Sheffield, Sub-Deacon, and Right Rev. Monsignor MacGinley, D.D., P.P., Ballyshannon, Master of Ceremonies. After the first Gospel, Rev. John Deeney, Rector, St. Columba’s Industrial Schools, Killybegs, delivered an instructive and touching sermon, concluding by making an appeal, which was nobly responded to, for the restoration fund of St. Patrick’s Church, Ballyshannon, and the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Cashelard. The music of the Mass – the Missa De Angelis – was splendidly rendered by the Choir of St. Patrick’s Church under the baton of Mr. P. Cleary, N.T. The unaccompanied motet, Palastrina’s “Ave Maria” (Vatican edition) was particularly rich in harmony and expression. Solemn Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament followed the Mass, and the singing of “Faith of Our Fathers,” with Band accompaniment, brought a great and moving religious ceremony to a close.
Mystery  of St. Patrick’s Statue at the Well solved
Three years later on St. Patrick’s Day 1932 the new statue to St. Patrick was blessed at the Abbey Well by Monsignor McGinley D.D. The statue was donated anonymously.  In 1940 the identity of the donor was revealed when Maurice P. Hayes died in that year at Santa Monica in California. His connection with the Ballyshannon area was through his friendship with William Meehan of Durnish Rossnowlagh and he had acted as executor of his will in 1905. Much later he met Fr. Griffith, a nephew of William Meehan, who was a curate in Ballyshannon. The Hayes family came on a trip to Ireland and met Fr. Griffith in Dublin where he told them of the development of the Abbey Well. Maurice Hayes gave a gift of the statue of St. Patrick which still stands at the Abbey Well with the inscription; “Pray for the Donor.”




The Stations at the Abbey Well
Patterns or festivals were celebrated in honour of the patron saint (patrún) of a district or of some saint associated with the area. The pattern at the Abbey Well was held on the Feast of the Assumption on the 15th August each year. It is possible this feast day was chosen because the nearby Abbey of Assaroe was dedicated to Mary. Patterns were important social occasions and, according to tradition, the pattern at the Abbey Well was attended by large crowds up to the nineteenth century with the religious and social events lasting for a few days.
On arrival at the Abbey Well, the pilgrims on some occasions would have Mass celebrated for them, but for the most part they would have performed the station. The station involved reciting set prayers and moving around beds in a similar manner to Lough Derg at the present time. According to folklore the station at the Abbey Well went as follows: Fifteen pebbles were picked from the river bed or station bed and pilgrims began by saying, one Our Father, one Hail Mary and one Creed while kneeling at the well. Then going sun wise they knelt at each bed, saying one Our Father, ten Hail Mary’s and one Creed. A pebble was tossed into each bed. The round of five beds was completed three times and the station was concluded by taking three sips of water from the well and saying a rosary at the grotto. A rag or a medal was left on the bushes near the well. It was also believed that if the water was misused the well would dry up. It was said that a woman used the well to wash clothes and that the well dried up and remained so until blessed by the priest. 
Two St. Patrick's Wells ? and the Rag Trees in the Abbey
If you look at the Ordnance Survey Map for the Abbeylands at Ballyshannon (O.S. 107) you will discover a most curious enigma. The name of the well at the Abbey Bay is listed on the map as Tobernaboghilla, in Irish Tobar na Bachaille which means the Well of the Crozier or Staff.   (An alternative meaning suggested for Tobar na Bachaille  is the well of the cripple) . In the neighbouring townland of Abbey Island is a well, clearly marked on the Ordnance Survey map as Toberpatrick or Patrick’s Well. This well was situated on the Ballyshannon side of Abbey Assaroe and the graveyard. ( in a field close to the junction with the Rossnowlagh Road). In the 1930s when the folklore of the area was being collected,  Brother Nathy, a De La Salle Brother, recorded that people at one time visited this well as a place of pilgrimage: “There is a Tobar Patrick near the Pound, in the townland of the Abbey but no stations are performed there now; up to thirty years ago, people frequented this well as a place of pilgrimage; but since its enclosure by Mr. Cassidy, Ballyshannon, for the production of mineral waters, which never materialised, though the sample of water from this well was the best of six or seven other sample .” At some period in the history of the two wells,Tobernaboghilla became St. Patrick’s Well, and all veneration at the well centred on Saint Patrick. All that remains of  Toberpatrick or Patrick’s Well in nearby Abbey Island, is a forgotten name on an ordnance survey map and the folklore that indicates people visited it up to the 1900 period.

A station at the Abbey Well Ballyshannon
Despite the religious revival in the 1930s and 1940s,  large crowds visiting the Abbey well gradually waned and nowadays visits to the well are infrequent, except on days like the 15th of August when people still carry on the tradition of visiting the well on the pattern day. A feature of the Abbey Well which still attracts great interest from visitors are the rags on the white thorn bushes. Wells were said to have certain cures attached to them and the Abbey Well water was said to be most beneficial for trouble of the eyes. Offerings of coins, medals, flowers and cloth are associated with wells in various parts of the country and the tradition is still practised at the Abbey Well. This tradition of pilgrims with illness or concerns, praying and leaving a piece of cloth on a bush, reminds us that in our modern world there are still echoes of a world which has not fully vanished.

In this period of Heritage Week it is a good time for visitors and  local people to visit this historic well and reflect on the contributions made by local people, 90 years ago, this week, in passing on this beautiful Abbey well to the present generation. Bring the blog with you and self-guide your visit.



Book available from  A Novel Idea Bookshop Ballyshannon, Four Masters Bookshop Donegal Town and Local Hands Ballyshannon.

Hardback and softback book also available from the author Anthony Begley- contact anthonyrbegley@hotmail.com


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